Emily Brontė was born on July 30th, 1818, the 5th child of
the Reverend Patrick Brontė, a stern Evangelical curate, and his wife Maria. When Emily was three years old, her mother died
of cancer, and her Aunt Branwell, a strict Calvinist, moved in to help raise the six children (another daughter, Anne, was
born soon after Emily). They lived in a parsonage in Haworth with the bleak moors of Yorkshire on one side and the parish
graveyard on the other. When Emily was 6 years old she went to a boarding school run by charity, the Clergy Daughters' School
at Cowan Bridge, where her older sisters Maria, Elizabeth, and Charlotte were already enrolled. The school was in no sense
a material improvement over her home environment: it was run with the intention of punishing the pupils' bodies that their
souls might be saved. The students were kept hungry, cold, tired, and often ill: Maria in particular, who at her young age
did her best to mother her sisters, was treated extremely harshly. In 1825 Maria and Elizabeth both died of tuberculosis,
the disease that was later to claim Emily's own life, and that of her younger sister Anne. Following these new bereavements,
the surviving sisters Charlotte and Emily were taken home, but they would never forget the terrors and the hardship of their
lives at school. Charlotte made it the model for the charity school Lowood, which figures so prominently in the life of her
heroine Jane Eyre.

Life at home was much better for Emily and her siblings:
in their isolated childhood on the moors, they developed an extremely close relationship partly based on their mutual participation
in a vibrant game of make-believe. In 1826 their father brought Branwell a box of wooden soldiers, and each child chose a
soldier and gave him a name and character: these were to be the foundation of the creation of a complicated fantasy world,
which the Brontės actively worked on for 16 years. They made tiny books containing stories, plays, histories, and poetry written
by their imagined heros and heroines. Unfortunately, only ones written by Charlotte and Branwell survive: of Emily's work
we only have her poetry, and indeed her most passionate and lovely poetry is written from the perspectives of inhabitants
of "Gondal." For Emily, it seems that the fantastic adventures in imaginary Gondal coexisted on almost an equal level of importance
and reality with the lonely and mundane world of household chores and walks on the moor. One would be mistaken, however, to
conclude that the poetic beauty of Gondal was essentially different from that which Emily saw in the world around her. This
becomes clear in her novel Wuthering Heights, in which her familiar Yorkshire surroundings become the setting for a
tragedy whose passion and beauty is equal to anything that could be imagined elsewhere. Passion is in no way inconsistent
with empty moors, cold winters, and brown hills.

As might be imagined from her intense emotional and artistic
attachment to the country of her childhood, Emily Brontė very rarely spent any time away from home: indeed she could hardly
do so at all. In 1835, at the age of seventeen she went to school at Roe Head where Charlotte was teaching, but became so
pale and thin that her sister was convinced she would die unless she returned home. She left home again to be a governess
in 1837 (a failure) and to study in Belgium in 1842, but both times she found she was unable to bear being away from home
and her beloved, wild countryside. She could not adapt to playing the role of a genteel Victorian lady, or deal with the intrusion
of strangers into her life ­ she could never fit in. Emily never made any close friends outside of her family circle.

In 1845 Charlotte came across Emily's Gondal poems and read
them, which made Emily furious when she found out. However, the discovery led to the publication of a volume of Charlotte,
Emily, and Anne's poetry under the names of Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell. They sold only two copies, but did not give up
writing: Wuthering Heights was probably written in 1845-6, while Charlotte was working on The Professor and Jane Eyre,
and Anne wrote Agnes Grey. Wuthering Heights (by Ellis Bell), was published in 1847, and attracted considerable critical
attention: many people were shocked and horrified by sheer violence of Emily's novel.

While his sister were on their way to becoming famous authors,
Branwell had failed as a painter and lapsed into alcoholism and drug abuse. He died in September of 1848, and his death marked
the beginning of Emily's own illness. Tuberculosis killed her rapidly, perhaps because she stoically refused to make any concession
to her ill health, continuing to get up early every day to feed her numerous animals even when she could barely walk. She
died with heroic fortitude on December 19th, 1848, at the age of 30, and did not have time to appreciate the last flowering
sprig of heather which Charlotte had found on the moors for her wild sister. Emily Brontė's stern self-discipline and passionate
creative vision have continued to entrance modern readers through her poetry and especially her masterpiece, Wuthering
Heights.

* She
was the only one of the Brontė children to be given a middle name. Apparently even then they realized she was different.

* This messed Emily up a little in the long run. She became
WAY too attached to this world.

* Even when she was nearly 27 years old, she eagerly resorted
to playing Gondal characters while on a trip to York with Anne. When she wrote about the trip later, she mentions almost nothing
of the trip except for the Gondal fanatasies.

* Though she had a hard time relating to her pupils. One
student recalled her telling her class that the school's dog was dearer to her than any of them were.

* Emily didn't want to leave home at all, but Charlotte had
to take someone from the family with her or she wouldn't be allowed to go, and only Emily was available.

* Emily was always especially freaked out at the idea of
being revealed as an author. She made Charlotte swear never to tell anyone, and at one point, Charlotte out and out lied to
her best friend, Ellen Nussey, to keep the secret.

* This may startle the modern reader of Wuthering Heights.
It just goes to show how far we've come since then.

"I've dreamt in my life dreams that have stayed with me ever
after, and changed my ideas: they've gone through and through me, like wine through water, and altered the color of my mind."